ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF Free Download

ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

Features of ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF-THIS IS THE NEW 2021 EDITION. CURRENT FOR 2022.

•101 Questions that cover all aspects of the ACLS exam, plus the answers with explanations.
• This book is specifically geared toward healthcare professionals and students preparing to take the ACLS certification and recertification exam.
• This book will also give seasoned healthcare professionals lots of great review information and a way to update themselves on the latest research and guidelines.
• Whichever certifying agency’s program you are taking, either in a classroom or online, this book will help you succeed in the ACLS course.
• In this book, we give you all the essential information you’ll need to pass the certification and recertification course and exam.

HOW THIS BOOK WILL HELP YOU PASS THE ACLS CERTIFICATION AND RECERTIFICATION EXAM
• We have created a video for every topic and chapter in this book, all available on YouTube.
• Lots of practical and usable information and advice about the ACLS course and exam.
• 101 practice questions that cover every possible medical and nursing scenario and topic on the ACLS certification exam.
• No confusing wrong answers to clutter your brain.
• This book, together with Michele’s YouTube videos, will greatly reduce your test-taking anxiety.
• All information in this book has been updated to the current guidelines.
• Michele is always available for your email questions about this book or any aspect of nursing or hospital work.

THIS BOOK IS FOR ALL HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS AND EMERGENCY RESPONDERS THAT MUST BE READY TO PROVIDE EMERGENCY CARE FOR ADULTS, SUCH AS:
• Physicians (MD’s, DO’s, DPM’s)
• Nurses
• Paramedics
• Emergency Medical Technicians
• Physician’s Assistants
• Nurse Practitioners
• Residents and Fellows
• Medical and Nursing Students
• Medical and Nursing Assistants
• Dentists
• For all licensed healthcare professionals

MICHELE G. KUNZ, MSN, ANP, RN, NPD-BC
• AHA Certified Instructor specializing in providing AHA Certification and Recertification courses in ACLS, BLS, and PALS since 1984.
• Critical Care Nursing Educator at Mercy Medical Center, Rockville Centre, NY.
• In nursing and critical care since 1975.
• Registered Nurse since 1978.
• Personally trained many RNs, MDs, PAs, DOs, NPs, and DDSs in New York City, Westchester, and Long Island.
• Offers AHA-approved classes in her classroom, in your office, or hospital unit.
• Teaches the medical staff at over 700 NYC and LI medical offices, surgicenters, dental offices, and hospitals.
• Also certifies the students and teaching staff at several medical, nursing, and PA colleges and universities.

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Description of ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF is one of the best medical books for students and for emergency medical doctors . It is a must download.

The Authors

ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

I am an AHA Certified Instructor and specialize in providing AHA Certification classes in ACLS, BLS, and PALS. Visit my website at MicheleKunz.com to see more about me, my classes, my books, study guides, essays, and articles. You can watch all of my free videos at YouTube.com/MicheleKunz.

I have been a clinical nursing educator for over 35 years. During those years, I have helped many thousands of nurses improve their own job performance and increase their own job satisfaction. I consider myself to be a nurse’s nurse, because I am not hidden away in a classroom, but out on the floor everyday – interacting with hospital management, the nurses, the patients, and the physicians.

For many years I was the Director of Nursing Education and Informatics at Long Island College Hospital in Brooklyn, NY. I was in the LICH Nursing Education Department for 25 years. I developed the desire to teach nurses over 30 years ago when I was an ICU nurse at Staten Island University Hospital. It was at SIUH that I realized that I could learn how to be a better nurse by teaching the other nurses. I haven’t stopped teaching since then.

I am also the Director of Medical Education at Dickson Keanaghan, LLC, a company that my husband Joe and I started, where we train the medical staff of over 700 hospitals, medical offices, and surgi-centers on Long Island and New York City.

about Michele, and ask her a nursing related questions, at her nursing blog MicheleKunz.com.

Dimensions and Characteristics of ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

  • Identification Number ‏ : ‎ B09BF6B2NH
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published (July 28, 2021)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 162 pages
  • International Standard Book Number-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8545298594
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.08 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.5 x 0.37 x 11 inches
  • Book Name : ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

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Top reviews

PLS “Great warm up for ACLS recertification however I wish the author would have outlined the new AHA guideline changes. Also there is an incorrect answer key for question number 71. Most of the questions were identical to the 2017 and 2015 version. Was hoping for new questions.”

T. Scott Gruzebeck “Liked the book well, still using it. I am using for an up-coming class.”
Reality Check “I purchased this book because I am interested in the idea that morals may be inborn — part of human nature — and that each culture shares certain basic values. I started reading the book enthusiastically, but by the end I was skimming pages and dismayed that the author had so seriously failed to provide any solutions to our political problems.

Haidt starts by dividing the human mind into what he calls the elephant and the rider. The rider is the reasoning, rational mind, whereas the elephant is the irrational, impulsive and intuitive mind. He argues that human moral decisions are guided by the elephant, and that the rider just comes up with a rationalized, post-facto “reasonable” justification after the decisions have been made by the elephant. Of course, anyone who has been alive for more than a couple decades may have noticed this kind of “logic” in his fellow humans. It goes like this: “Here are my biases, now how do I make an argument to justify it.”

Later in the book, he goes into more detail and lists the specific intuitions that may bias people towards certain moral conclusions: care/harm, liberty/oppression, fairness/cheating, loyalty/betrayal, authority/subversion, sanctity/degradation.

However, he doesn’t call them biases (that’s my own terminology). He describes them as something like the taste buds of morality, whereupon one may develop certain “tastes” over a lifetime that cause one to be liberal (progressive) or conservative. Just like we may have a preference for sweet food, we might also have partially inborn and partially acquired intuition for, to make an example, loyalty, which may lead one to make statements like “My country, right or wrong” in the face of unethical behavior by one’s government.

Haidt rejects rational thinking entirely. Indeed, he goes so far as to label those who engage in systematic rational thinking as “autistic” (pg 136). He labels modern, civilized countries as WEIRD (an insulting acronym he made up). He also has no interest in individual rights, such as America’s Bill of Rights. Rather, he finds solace in the ignorance of impoverished villagers in northeast Brazil and primitive people of India who wipe their butts with their hands (really! see pg 122). He praises studies which show that ignorant people prefer collectivism and use their intuitions (prejudices/biases) when making moral decisions. Critical thinking? Rights? To Haidt, they’re irrelevant. He’s openly hostile to critical thinking. He disparages psychological studies of advanced (“WEIRD”) countries as “statistical outliers” (pg 112).

Essentially, his ethics can be summarized as “cultural relativism”, except that Western cultures are always wrong and those on the upper half of the bell curve (advanced, civilized societies) are WEIRD. Since humans are incapable of reason (according to Haidt), we can only navigate ethical and political decisions by intuitions. Whose intuitions should we follow, you ask? Well, that’s unclear, although he does provide some helpful graphs of the intuitions of different political views towards the end of the book. I guess whoever shouts the loudest gets to make the rules.

I don’t actually disagree with any of Haidt’s psychological studies. I just come to entirely different conclusion. When Haidt finds ignorance and prejudice, he wants to build a code of ethics out of it. Where I find ignorance and prejudice, I want to educate people and help them to understand the points of views of others. How can this come about? Well, first one must accept that there is a real, physical reality out there, and that certain actions make sense in the real world and others don’t. If you compare today’s political discussion with that of previous generations, you can see how far we’ve fallen. For example, read “The Federalist Papers” and compare that to any modern day politician’s anti-intellectualism, and you can realize how much America has lost since our founding in terms of critical thinking and honest debate.

The Enlightenment-style system of individual rights has advanced society enormously. Unfortunately, there are still pseudo-intellectuals like Haidt who want to drag us back into the stone age, or worse, towards fascism, religious fundamentalism, or communism. I find this book disturbing and could go on and on about problems I have with it, however I think I’ve said enough to get my point across.”

Brandon “I’ve read a lot of books in my life. Psychology, Poetry, Biology, Business Theory, Self-Help, Nutrition, Economics and so many other subjects are represented in my home library.

The Righteous Mind is hands-down the most important book I’ve ever consumed. Haidt’s understanding of human morality and the science of communication and decision making are weaved together into an approachable, beautiful and potentially life changing symphony.

Enough has been said about why you should read this book so I want to use the rest of this review to tell you exactly what I experienced after finishing this book and how it became “The most important thing I’ve ever read”.

I have struggled for years to communicate with some of my friends and family. So many words were wasted discussing politics, religion and conspiracy theories and all we ever accomplished was self-fulfillment. We never had resolution and we never succeeded in convincing the other side.

I’m a person who considers myself well-read and a champion for pragmatism and logic. You can probably imagine how frustrated I felt when I was consistently unable to win arguments about out-there, government’s coming for us-so buy some guns, conspiracy discussions.

Something had to give, so I went searching and ended up on this book. I read it, digested it and decided to try and apply the principles to my communications. I was determined to “align with their elephant” first so I could then shift their mindset to my point of view.

Let’s be honest: I was just trying to manipulate other people into seeing things my way.

Well, something incredible and completely unintentional happened: I realized I was wrong, a lot.

One of the foundational pieces discussed in the book is the fact that we, as humans, make decisions in the parts of our brain that aren’t subject to critical thinking. If you want to sway someones opinion, Haidt suggests, you must first appeal to their elephant (the emotional part of their brain or “why they feel the way they do”).

In the effort to start practicing this: I dedicated myself to asking “why do they believe this way?” first and only made suggestions after I felt that I could articulate what the other person was “feeling” about the subject.

A crazy thing happened: many times I would find myself changing my mind about a subject mid conversation. As it turns out, other people aren’t quite as crazy as I thought, they just have different experiences than I do.

After I spent some time training my brain, I started to conversate this way without any conscious effort. I actually seem to have re-wired my brain. The implication of this can’t be overstated.

I now see the world in completely different ways and I feel that I can actually empathize for the first time in my life.

I only wish everyone could read this book, understand their natural decision making process and be aware of what’s happening to them when they have disagreements or strong opinions on a subject.

You need to read this book. Everyone does.

To the author: Thank you, Jonathan, for giving your life to understanding us a little better and for taking the time to write it all down and pass these lessons onto the rest of us.”

Reference: Wikipedia

ACLS Certification Exam Q&A With Explanations PDF

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